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February 2012 was more active than normal in terms of the number of tornadoes, with a total of 50 confirmed. While the first three weeks of the month were unusually quiet, the pattern changed abruptly with a major tornado outbreak, which struck the region less than 72 hours prior to this storm, killing 15 people, including 8 in Harrisburg, Illinois alone, the result of an EF4 tornado.
A localized tornado outbreak affected primarily the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex on April 3, 2012. [2] During the morning of April 3, a large low-pressure area and associated frontal boundaries tracked across the Southern United States. Initially, environmental conditions did not favor the development of tornadoes.
The 2012 Leap Day tornado outbreak was a significant and deadly tornado outbreak on February 28 and February 29, 2012. It is so called because the second day was a leap day. It caused severe damage in several regions, especially the Great Plains and Ohio Valley regions. It also resulted in several tornadoes in the Central Plains, a rarity for ...
Damage to a home in Forney, Texas, from an EF3 tornado on April 3. A relative lull in tornado activity occurred in mid-March, but activity soon rose again by the end of the month when an EF2 killed one person on March 23 near Louisville, Kentucky. The beginning of April also started off active, with a tornado outbreak occurring in North Texas ...
Tornado outbreak of April 2–3, 1982: April 2–3, 1982: Southern Plains – Mississippi Valley: 61: 29 fatalities: Produced an F5 tornado near Broken Bow, Oklahoma, though the rating is disputed. An F4 tornado also struck Paris, Texas, and another occurred in Arkansas. (24 significant, 4 violent, 10 killer) May 1982 tornado outbreak: May 11 ...
Tornado outbreak of March 31 – April 1, 2023 – a historic outbreak that happened the year prior. Tornado outbreak of March 13–15, 2024 – another significant outbreak that happened earlier in the year. Tornado outbreak sequence of May 19–27, 2024 – yet another tornado and severe storm event that impacted many of the same areas.
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In November 2023, this tornado was reanalyzed and had its track extended significantly based on a narrow swath of tree damage noted on high-resolution Planet satellite imagery. The tornado occurred primarily in densely forested areas largely inaccessible to the survey team. Path length increased from 0.17 mi (0.27 km) to 3.18 mi (5.12 km). [9] EF0